John Nicholson Inglefield

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John Nicholson Inglefield (1748 - 1828) was an officer in the British Royal Navy.

John Nicholson Inglefield was the son of a ship's carpenter, Isaac Inglefield, and his wife, a sister of the ship designer Thomas Slade, (later Sir Thomas Slade). According to Captain Inglefield himself his paternal family was of Lancashire origin and distantly connected to that of the Englefields.

Under the patronage of his maternal uncle, Thomas Slade, Inglefield joined the navy as a boy of 11 in 1759. In April 1766 he was rated Able Seaman aboard the Launceston: in May 1768 he was made lieutenant and moved into the Romney under the command of Sir Samuel Hood. This connection was to prove the most significant of Inglefield's career. Although Inglefield returned to the Launceston in October, by July 1769 he was back with Hood aboard the Romney and from that time forward his career was closely associated with his friend's. With him Inglefield left the Romney in December 1770, served in the Marlborough and Courageux, and in 1778 in the Robust with Hood's brother Alexander. Aboard the Robust he was present at the action of Ushant on 27 July.

On 27 December 1773 at Baughurst, Hampshire, Inglefield married Ann Smith, daughter of a gentleman of Greenwich named Robert Smith. They had three daughters and one son, Samuel Hood Inglefield, who also went on to a distinguished naval career and was the father of Sir Edward Augustus Inglefield.

In June 1779 Inglefield was promoted to command of the sloop Lively and in the October of the following year made Captain and posted to the Barfleur (90 guns), in which his patron, Sir Samuel Hood, hoisted his flag. As second-in-command Inglefield sailed to the West Indies and took part in the skirmish with the French fleet off Martinique in 1781. In August of the same year Hood transferred him to the Centaur (74 guns), which Inglefield commanded in three actions against the French, culminating in the battle of 12 April 1782 at the Saints.

It was however aboard the Centaur that Inglefield suffered the most harrowing episode of his career when, sailing for England with the convoy under Rear-Admiral Sir Thomas Graves, his ship along with the others was struck by a hurricane. The Centaur, an ageing ship, was severely damaged. Dismasted, rudderless and thrown upon her beam ends, she eventually foundered despite the most strenuous efforts of Inglefield and the crew over several days. Inglefield and eleven others escaped aboard the pinnace, though otherwise the ship's complement of some six hundred was lost. Subsisting on a little barrel of rum, some ship's biscuit and rainwater wrung out into a cup, the survivors successfully navigated to the port of Faial in the Azores after sixteen days of the most terrible privation which saw one of them, Thomas Matthews, die the day before they reached land. On returning to England and the court martial usual in such cases, the survivors were acquitted. Inglefield's spare and unsensational description of this disaster, Captain Inglefield's narrative concerning the loss of the 'Centaur' was published shortly after. A dramatic painting of the incident in which those on the pinnace, thrusting off from the foundering Centaur, pulled aboard a fifteen-year-old midshipman who had thrown himself from the wreck, was later made into a popular print.

For three years Inglefield was given a home posting aboard the guardship Scipio in the Medway. In 1786 however he and his wife were publicly involved in a marital dispute which led to a permanent breach. In 1788 Inglefield was posted to the Adventure (44 guns) which, joined later by the Medusa (44 guns), also under his command, patrolled the West Coast of Africa. In 1793 he was serving in the Mediterranean aboard the frigate Aigle (36 guns) and in 1794 was appointed captain of the fleet. Towards the end of 1794 he returned to England with Samuel, now Viscount, Hood and was thereafter a resident commissioner of the Navy, serving in Corsica, Malta, Gibraltar and Halifax, Nova Scotia. In 1799 he was placed on the list of retired captains.

He died in Greenwich, Kent before 7th February 1828 when his will was proved. In his will he bequeathed his estate of some £8,300,apart from three annuities to relatives,to his two surviving children, Samuel Hood Inglefield and Lady Ann Hallowell-Carew, wife of Sir Benjamin Hallowell-Carew,

[edit] References

  • J. K. Laughton, ‘Inglefield, John Nicholson (1748–1828)’, rev. P. L. C. Webb, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  • John Nicholson Inglefield, 'Captain Inglefield's narrative concerning the loss of the 'Centaur', 1783
  • John Nicholson Inglefield, 'Captain Inglefield's Vindication...', 1787
  • Ann Inglefield, 'Mrs Inglefield's Justification,...', 1787